)c l)Qtl)am ttcori. II. -A.. LUMDOM, EDITOR AKD PROPRIETOR. HATES ADVERTISING One square, one insertion- 11. A One square, two insertions 1.60 Oue square, one month - 8ftU For largar advertisements liberal ceo racta will be made. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, $1.50 PER YEAR Strictly in Advance. VOL. XV. PlTTSBOttO CHATHAM CO., N. C, JUNK 22, J81W. NO. Turning (ho Clock's Hands. I found young Sliorlem standing thoro On tiptoe on the highest chair, Turning the bunds upon the clock " Dm fas' ns I can make Vni walk." " Why, naughty ShorU-ni," 1 protest, " l.'p to the clock yon should not climb," " I fought," said Shorten), "it was best To turn it roun' to supper time." And then young Shorten) danced away And went mirhiiled to his piny, For do we not nil love to climb And turn the laggard hands of time. And whirl the slow-paced hours nw-iy To some far, beiitillc ltt .' I'p to the do k tlril ticks our doom We, nil like Miortem love to climb, And p.iss iron) this "between uicuD gloom And turn It round to supper time. Sain Walter Koss, in Yankee B'ntlo. The Bravest Deed I Ever Saw ItV CAITAIN CI1.VKI.KS KINi, r. s. a. It was n wretched morning wet, dripping, will) misty wreaths bunging low over every butlo and crag. For Jays wo had born marching with staiving horse over rolling prairies from which t tic Indians had burned every blade of buffalo grass. Not ii lout bud wo in Ibo entire com maud ; not n change of clothing, ami since wo cro-so I ilio L'ttlo Missouri and si i nek Ihc head waters of Heart River not a full stomach. Kitious were well nigh exhausted. Wo were living on "quiirier portions" of bacon, hardtack and sugarless codec. U was the mi minor of the terrible Custer Massacre ( 1 870 ) , and night nml day wo were pursuing I lie SiouX, hoping to overtake and punish tin in. Hut they scorn lo have scattered over Ihc face of tin eailh. .Silting It it I, wiili n great follow ing, bail crossed the Yellowstone and gono north. Crazy Horse, a brilliant und during leader, with a host of Oga lullus mid UmiIcs at bis back, was known lo have made for the fastnesses of the Had Lands of western Dakola. Thither (ieneml Crook was now lending us a column strong in num bers, for we bad .01110 forty companies of regulars, as well as a goodly force of i-O' Hi , packers and other. Our cointuund consisted of the cn tiio third cavalry, most of the fifth, u battalion "four iiiups of tbo second cavalry, and a detachment of infantry chosen fiont lluee regiments. We bad men enough to ovcieuuc nil the Indians in Dakota; but with starving horses and half-starving soldiers little can be done in i lie way of aggressive warfare. Our rations practically gave out on I ho t-ixtli of September. For several days we lived on horso meal. The choice was bo went that or our boot", and as vc hud been scouting, Irump hijf nml campaigning ever since l lie spring, our boots wero worn as thin us our Itoasts. About 7 o'clock in tin) morning of September ninth ihc iijws flew down llio column like a (lush, ' Sioux village blij one fifteen miles ahead I" Oolouol Hills, then a senior captain serving with Ibo third cavalry, had boon sent for wind by (Icncntl Crook Iwc n it hta before with orders to push through lo the lUnck Hills with hi eommaud 1 5t picked horses and nion sod a pack train load up wiili all the provltioiis hu could buy, and hasten bsck to inoet lit. This very morning si daybreak lie had dashed into the village which his scouts "located" during the night, and wits now "hanging on'' to hi prize until we could roach him. Well, wo got there pushing ahead lluoug mud, mit ami ruin, lljing ndjutsut, 1 happened to lido at head of column as we nearcd the scene, and to obtained uenpltal view and a list ing Impression of tho situation. For the lime being there was a lull in tbo light. Foriy-ono big lodges wero scattered about tho ravines in a iloop ainpithontro of the craggy hills kuown is Slim Unties. Mills had M at tered tho Indians ju-t at dawn, cap tured a herd of four hundred ponies, found several sovonlh cavalry horses, one of Custer's beiiutiful silken guidons, Captain Myles Kcoh's gaunt lots, nnd other trophies which proved that thesa fellows hail been concerned in tbo massacre, ami ihat they must bo part of Criuy Horse's big band. Therefore their friend could not be far away. Laic that afternoon tho whole party came Crazy Horse with bundled of his warriors and a lively light we bad with them; hut meantime, oc curred what seems to me perhaps ihc bravest ihii.g I ever saw in Indian warfare. Look out for that ravine !" said Colonel Mills to me, as I was riding in among the lodge 'There's a wounded Indian in there, and lie has killed one of my men." SjlU'O enough! Out in the slopes near tho deep, brush-biddon depths of tho little gorgo a cavalry soldier, Won zel, was toppled forward on his knee, etouc dead, and Sergeant I hiss bad just got a bullet through tho arm. It was plain that there must bo more iliuii one Indian in there, for two quick shots suddenly rang out, and u couple of scouts crossing the lowlands nenr tho mouth of ibo gully ducked i heir heads and tan for shelter. My orders required me to place the fifth cavalry in position facing the blull lo the southeast and south of tbo captured village. After this duty was performed, and I had seen the various troop commander and given thcin the colonel's instruct ions, 1 had leisure to look about inc. I did not dream what a living volcano there was at the head of that lit'le ravine. I bad found a liltlu patch of grass down in a sheltered nook und had thero ickctcd my poor old troop horse and was coining back afoot tow ard the big "lodgo" of skins beside which the colonel had unsaddled, when I caught sight of tlirco or four scouts and troopers crawling toward Ih') opening of the ravine, evidently bent on getting a shot at the occu pun'.s. In a moment those fellows were Ibtlleued out on the ground like a bunted squirrel on the trunk of n tree, mid the moislurc-lnidcn air lang with shots as the lend whizzed over their bend Every one seemed to wake up nli at once lo ibo rcallzitiou that there was a nest of ivdskiiin up at ihe head of tho gully. Presently a eoncerieJ effort was made lo fe:cli I hem out. Ha f a dozen ellieors und several ill . 'ii soldiers and scouts took part ami, as though by common consent, tbe leadership devolved on one of the bravest, manliest cavalry men it was ever my lot to know l'hilo Chirk, i lie it lieu count and aide-de-camp to ieueral Crook. 1 remember him vividly ns ho looked I hat day, the broad b; i in of bis scout, ing hat tossed back from his forehead, the collar of hi buckskin hunting shirl looso y fas ened at the throat no sign of uniform about him, for in iho-e days we rarely wore tbe army blue on Indian campaigns. He came striding forward, rill J in hum!, and waving the lucii to "go in'' a ong tho slopes to the right and loft of the ravine. He himself, to my honor, c lolly pushed straight for ward into what might be called the mouth of ihe gull) .straight on past ihe point where the venturesome troopers had been flattened out so shot t n time before. In an instant, it seemed to me, the clump of bushes at tho upper end began to spit lire like a Fourth of July 1 1 1 i no. A blue cloud of sulphur smoke bung over the Indian burrow. The chit lor of rille shots was liko that of u (hilling gnu. Several soldiers dropped in their (racks along tho grassy slopes. Jim While, one of our best scouts and a great friend of Buffalo Hill's, gave ouo ghastly cry, "O my (iod, boys!" clasped his bauds lo bis heart and plunged forward oil bis face, slono dead. Keeling back from the sudden shook our men at (ho moment sc ittcrcd right and loft, for we had struck a formida ble ambush. Not a vostigc of an In dian could wo tee, yet that soooped oul shelter of theirs was evidently crammed with them. 1 niysolt was over on tho right bank at the time, and ducked with amazing proinptttudo when that storm of tire and lead burst on us. My noxt thought when I found myself unhurt was for Clink. Wo had been warm friends from our cadet days lit West Puinti mid my heart was in my niouili with fear for him. Thero lie stood, just where I bad seen lii in the inslaut before, with the same quiet sinilo on his face, never bending, never swerving, if anything rising higher on liptoe, as ihough striving to peer into that dark, lire Hashing dopih up the gully. Mechanically be was thrusting an oilier cartridge into tho bnccli of Ids rille. Rang! bang! went the Indian guns. Whiz! z;p! spat tho bullets. "Down, Claik! Down!' shouted dozens of voices in tones of agonized dread. "Cuiiio out of that, l'hilo, for heaven's sake!'' yelled n second caval ry man close bondo me. Itut just ns placidly and unconcernedly as be would have strolled into bis troop stables, smiling the whilo at the con sternation he was creating, even find ing time for a half-lnughiilg rejoinder to the appeal of a conn. ado from our side, Clark piishod ahead until ho could peer in through the veil of smoke, laiscd bis title, aimed ami tired. Then as coolly, he motioned, "Coino on! Come on!" It was too much for the crowd. Everybody seemed to mako a siinul t uicous flash then. In vain the hid den Indians fired mid strove to sweep the ravine. A moment more and brave old Cap. tain Miiiisoii had leaped in from one side aiiil was half-di ngging, half. lift, ing out some terrible squaws. Other willing hands wero passing out some creaming little Indian children, so us to gel the women and papoose out of harm's way before closing accounts with (he warriors. Then iinding their "non combat ants" kindly (rented, instead of being slaughtered, as would have been the cisc hud wo been the lesieged, the Sioux called out for quarter nml sur rendered. One old villain who went by the name of American Horso was already shot through the body and past praying for. Another fellow, who called himself Charging Hear, subse quently became an Indian scout in our service, and behaved very well. The others wero kept as prisoners until wc got to tho agency al Red Cloud. I had seen sonic Indian lighting before this allair, und have been in ono or Iwo campaigns since; but 1 recall no piece of individual daring and bravery and e. n unimate coolness under lire to eelip-o l'hilo Clark's ex ploit at Slim Rut tea in 1870. (iiiilunt fellow! He became a cap lain a few years later, and was serv ing in Washington City on the stall of Licutcnant-Gcncral Sheridan, who thought tho world of him, when death, which had spared him :i hun dred times over in Indian warfare, cut him down in the midst of peace, security, and in the very prime of a vigorous life. Youth's Companion. Timber 1000 Years Obi. Experts teem to bo divided us (o which of (he (wo hard woods jarrah and karri of Western Austrulia is the most d'trablo. Jarrali wood piles two feet two inches square, driven 153 years ago at the Largo Hay pier, were found, on examination, to bo as sound us tho day (hey wero put, in, S mo specimens of karri wood taken fiom u fence were recently sent to London, nnd. though the wood had boon underground for 25 years, it was perfectly sound. A specimen of jirriih wood under similar circum stances showed serious decay. Timber of the luiuuri-k or shillini wood has been found perfectly sound in the ancient temples of Egypt in connection with tho stonework which is known In be at least 4OU0 years old. In some tests made with small squares of various woods buried oue inch in the ground tho following re sults were obtained: Kirch and aspen decayed in three years; willow and horse-chestnut in four years; maple and red beech in live years; elm, ash, hornbeam and Lombard)' poplar in seven years; oak, Scotch fir, Wey mouth piuc and silver fir decayed to a depth of half an inch in seven years; larch, juniper ami arbor vitae were uninjured at lbs expiration of tho seven years. The redwood of California, has the quality of being nearly fireproof. The root of thobiicr is the only wood which does not burn when exposed lo lire. Coens-wood is the hardest knowr wood; oak is tbo strongest. The heuviest British wood is that of the box-tree, which sinks in water. Horn beam is tho strongest and toughest wood for mechanical use. Tho strongest American wood is t lie nut meg hickory ; tbe most elastic the Taiiiar oak; the heaviest, the blue wood of Tcxhi. In situations so fiee from nioisiurt that wo may practically call them dry, the durability of limber is almost un limited. The roof of Westminster hud is more than lot) years old. In Stirling casllo arc carvings in oak, well preserved, over tlUU years of age. Scotch lir has been found in good con dition after a known iuo of 1100 years, and the trusses of t Ins roof of the basilic of St. 1'aul, Rome, were sound and good after U0O years of service. Wood constantly wot in fresh water is quite as durable. Files were dug from Ihc foundations of (ho old Savoy I'alace in a perfectly Hound state after having been down Cot) years. Tho piles of O il Loudon hi idgo wero found sound ami pi'ifect fcOO sears afitr they were driven. Detroit Frco 1'iess. A Teuiler Spot. Mrs. Screleaf (io away! I give nothing to tramps. Tramp (wiping away a shimmering tear) Ah, lady! I once had ii wife as good looking as you are, but Mrs. Sorolotif (affected) (io around to the kitchen, poor fellow, nnd while you eat dinner, I'll listen to your sad story. fFuck. tllll.DREJi'S COLUMN. A CAItRI.KSS Pi IN If. I took my rubber hoots one day Ami put them on my pony's feet, Whereat the pony ran nway. Ami disappeared far down the street; And when they brought that pony buck, Although he'd kept his shoes all right, My lovely rubber boots, ul.e k ! Were really in tin awful plight. i St. I.'iiiis llep thlic. A yt.'KKK IM'. lull st iiAl:. I While llio ocean greyhounds have ( been busy cutting down the miming j time bolwoon Sandy Hook and tj irens town ly menus of a con-tuuily in- J creasing consumption of coal, a Mn- ; sachiiseits man has been at work on an engine which be declares will on- , nblo a bin lo cross Ihc sea in a little 1 over three (biys and, that without the j use of any coal at all. And what do 1 you think will lake its place as one of tho chief sources of the motive power? ; Sugar. Simula like a fairy lale, doesn't it? lint suppose you had lived two htiii- ! tired years ago and some one bad told you that the steam causing tin) top of a steam kettle to dance would result in an invention capubln of carrying pec : pie about the country at the rate of I sixty milcH an lioui wouldn't you j have declared thai lo be u fairy talo too? 1 Still, the sugar and chlorate of pot- j nsh boat has not yet won its laurels. j Argosy. j TO M IN I I'.ltHKI'.KX IiKUUM'.S j Who sings your praises, bright beauties, you pretty little winter- j green berries? j Yet you comi with your fragrance . sub'le, and llio cowslip., dandelions ; and early violet, who whisper "How beautiful you are" with your rich ; color and glossy, fragrant leaves. I And nono need look on you with scornful eyes nor despise your niode.t loveliness, half bidden, on your lowly parent vine, dose to the warm earth that loves you. j You are hardy, tnavbe is Ihe iciisoii 1 1 why yon get little notice, and expect ; none, like other humble, rugged ; natures. Stiil, not in -,ro pica. ii o Imvu l.. ' first spring blossoms given the clul- i (Iron than have you, y-n blight, deli- i onto berries peeping, gay bits of color, out from among your shilling leaves, where you grow on ihe hillside, sharing your home with the friendly moss, or in tbo wood', modestly j thriving at the feet of mighty forest, giants, whero the shadows come and ' Hut the merry, singing birds and : happy, laughing children love you denily, you bright spicy treasures,' very dearly. Detroit Free Frets. j rot. i.ow r.tts ok thk t:i:iin:i.i!. About the only properly of the pco- tile of Lapland is their reindeer, and ' rich men do not estimate l heir wealth ' by tho number of dollars or pounds or francs they possoss, but by the iiuin. her of reindeer they own. Thi ani- -mill furnishes not only milk and meal t for food, but hides lor tents, shoos nnd clothing, and is mo: cover. :i sub- : slilulo for horses which nobody need i ll os pi sc. Riding beliin I a reindeer on j a long uariow Lapland sled is some times swift, and exciting business. A writer for Our Animal Friends says that "the annual migration of ihc reindeer from Lapland in search of ! food has now become a serious mat- i ter. j In the lirst place it uccssitatc tho ; migration of man, for if owners want to korp their deer and their property thoy must follow t ite m wherever Ibcv wander. Secordly, the migrating ani mals travel in such groat herds that they do great damage to the meadow-, ploughod lands und l'orcs's. rlieit ' j seems to be no stopping it. The deer I ! migrnto with more or less regularity, I And within a week or two of the usual ! time U hundred thousand rciudeci come to Tronnoe, which is the meet- i ing point. ! "Tho owners simply seo that their ; herds do not get away. Hut this in- , vusion of reindeer is viewed wiili ! alarm by Seaudidiivian farmers, who have their crops tramphd down. The ! farmer may sue for il ini igo, but i be ob ains a judgment in bis favoi how is be to find (he defendant? Some seven or eight years ago a , special law wss passed lo meet tho cao. The country is divided into ' districts, and if the owners of ihc do- I structive animals cannot be found, the 'f district is held for the damage, each family paying a proportion to Ihc ' number of reindeer it possesses." Ilurpei's Young l'coplo. During the lust two scars ihe num ber of members of the Hiitish Socictv for the l'rolcotion of Hiids lias in- i et cased from 000 lo nearly 70W. j NEW WORLD GATES. The Ellis Island Immigrant Sta tion Has Many Oddities. Hov; the Arrivals from Foreign Shores aro Received. Tho immigrant station at Iv is Island comprises a little world all in itself. The steerage passengers arc brought to the Maud on barges, and arc led to a large room upstairs in the lamiliar building, where they lire a-k''d to legi-ter. Tin; physical cxainina1 ion w liieh l' dlow s is searching and thor ough. I f (he subj. et p.is.es, he and his latni y are permitted to move. in duo eoiir.se liie new arrival is brought bef"re the idlieers at llio do teiition d 'sic, where he must answer nimtlicr li-t of questions and show his money. The luoii"y changer does a strange business, bundling the cur rency of the civili.i-d world. Ho will lake li.tiik of England Holes w ith the fane lea liucss th it he handle S nit Ii American currency. Soudi American money is about tic same s !. and shape us American piper, but. il is printed in cinnamon brown and slale blue, (ieru iin currency is printed in black and green. I'ad ni note aro of many sizes and shapes, printed in pale blue and carmine, liit-siau rubles are gridiroiicd with as many hues as there lire colors in the rainbow. The notes t f the li uiqiie do Fiance ate made of white paper, printed in black and blue, with numerous allegorical pict ures on the face and back. As soon us a ship arrives, and the men, women and children arc fairly within tlr; receiving mum, an attend ant, mounting liiiuclf on a table, in a conspicuous po-itiuii, call out ids list of letteis, Too immigrants eag erly crowd about b in. Ex pee am y, hope and fear are written upon their; ficrs. On days when the (i'liuan steamer., come in, llm mail is I iri nian ; on French days it is French; on Ital ian days Italian, and soon. Strange, rude foreign names ro-otnid through the wide h ill. Those who get letter retire to convenient nooks in the ile- tulillilll -(. . , .,...! fr'o,, their friends in Am-i ica. One of the most interesting' places at the station is the food section. Many of the strangers bring with them food of various soils, hard bread and bologna, but for other, who have a cent or two to buy, the counter comes in b indy. Once in every two or throe days, over the seas, oouie a pair of Hoeing lovers, who, after duo consideration, lesolve not to outer the Ian I of Ihe free until they h ive been 111 ide one. Ellis Island weddings ate one of tho unique features of the weil-kliowu station. Th 'ie is on.' room where the prospective bride and groom usually go when the e-rriu uiy is to bo per formed. Il is reached by a long hall in a corner of the building. Many a couple has be n united In re. If the young- v.-oin .u il.sjie (ho liles of soin,' chin cb, she i sent li one of the numerous mi-s:oii h iiises along Stub; slice', here she timls a pa-tor to marry her in pn nipt order. Soiih I iine-, too, :i iil mm l ies in older lo siav in the land of her choice, America. erv olleu she cannot pass the linaiK i ll I'xamlnai ion, and, having' matters explained lo b r. she linully decides she will marry some good fel low, who will be her piolccior, guide mid f i ieinl. Sometimes, a child will cross the foa under the care of a stranger. At the immigrant station th couple must 1 tut. The child is to go to one part of the country, ihe friend lo the other. Sad scenes of this son are aluio-l daily marled. It the waif is too young to bo trusted to I emeinlier her destina tion, one ot the i lli iuls places around her neck a tag, telling llio story, and she is foi wauled u.tich alter the fashion of live baggage. Tiiere is a telegraph 111 "e, where detained peo ple collllll uiiiealo w i I h friends. Tiiey are fed, free of chat go, al luncheon time, by tbe author t;o. The inea' consists of a bowl of soup and dougli lltl s. liecent siutisiies show that fully one lentil of titir agricultural l.-ihorcis are immigrant. Estimating the source of wealth of each immigrant as equal lo that of a farm baud, per head, il wou'd follow' thai the value of the 8 (1(111,01)11 j cople w ho left England, Scotland and Ireland in III years be tween 1S117 and I f7 ti w i. Inii.inii),. (."io, or an average of l7,"),t!iiii,oii(l t) a ieiir. During the past ear ihe French have brought the mosi money on the average, the Hungarian tbe least, the sum being s.Vi per capita in tho foiiuer in-iaiice and bill 1 1 in Ihe It. tor. Occasionally the million th' find a traveller w h i has from .fO al lo 1,000 stone I :twnv when !.: 111- rives at Ihe Island, but the majority of the immigrants liavo barely $60. New York Recorder. A lltiller Who Stood on His Dignity. A man who helped to muko a curious diplomatic episode in the duvs of Louis Fhiiippe's reign, died 11 few days ago in l' .ssy, a fcubmb of I'aris. lie was known among his neighbors simply as Francois, and for half a century or more bo lived at leisure on tho prolits accruing to him from n duel which he had fought in his youth w ith tbo father of lie; present Earl of i: cbci ry. .Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs in Mr. Gladstone' Cabinet. Francois bad resigned his place ns a iion-coiiiinissioiie l lli ;er in the French cavalry to iissttnie the more Initiative duties of butler in the house of a con spicuous Fiench statesman. One day old L n il Ilosebery came to see his ina-:er about the business of the Ilrit ish government. Fruneois dec'arod dial he could not deliver Lord R osi -ben's caul to his master, who was then engaged, and advised Lord R 0 hory, whom be did not recogniz", to secure a letter granting un audience an I 1 el urn letter. Ti.is was too much for the Hritish statesman, and thrusting his card into Francois's hand, he commanded him angrily lodcliverit at once. Francois, after starting nway with the card, stopped to read the naliio on il. Lord I'oscberry reproved him so sharply that Francois rep iod impudently. An exchange of angry words followed, and the muster of tho hou-e came to the icreption room to learn the cail-o of the disturbance. Francois was dis charged at once. On the next day Lord It iscberry received this note. 'Sir: Yesterday 1 was a i-ervaiit, today I am a fro - man. I no longer allow your insult to pass. As a former officer in the cavalry of the French army 1 demand satisfaction.'' Lord lloscbery accepted the chal lenge, and Iwo shots were exchangee1 without injury lo anybody concerned. Francois was satislie I, but Lord II e bejy wn nettled at Ihe thought that hi antagonist might al any time lay aside the dignity of a retired officer io become a bn'lcr again, ami inns cxposo him lo the reproach of having fought with a servant. IF', therefore gave Fiancois an annuity of francs on the condition of his abstaining from do nestle service in tbu future, and thus preserving bis personality as a retired man of honor. Francois ful filled his part of the agreement as faithfully iis did Lord H iscbory, and m ver woiked afterward; at least, that is what is allirmed by Ihe French newspapers which have incorporated 'his story in their obituary notices of the butler of honor New Y'ork Fooled by 1111 Ail 1st. F.i nest F. -Neville le ts this gold ' story of an artist') prank at tbe Na- , tiotial Academy of Design in New Yoil. L;iV: bines was sauntering about anil ', chanced to meet a friend, a deaf 1 mute, who was cmver-ing with a 1 c un 1 i:t 11 i 0 it in sign language, drooling Jones cordially, the deaf inntcdiew! out a note bcolv and pencil, and, after : a brief pencil and paper conversation, ! introduced his companion by the same ' moans, and shortly after withdrew. ; ,1 one and Ihc stranger discussed tho pictuies pleasant. y for twenty minutes or more, meanwhile covering the; backs of sundry envelopes ami scraps . of paper w ith their p.'licilings, when ! a font th character in this little di sum i came upon the scene a friend of Jones' new made acquaintance. j 'Hollo, (ieore,.. !" said the dumb man to the new. Miner, familiarly; 'how do you like the pictures this ; year?-' liy Jove!" exclaimed Jones in sur prise ; "can you ink ?" "Well, I should smile," said the gent 'email, equal y mii prised, as lie hislily put away pencil and paper. : "Aren't you deaf :"'d dumb?-' "Not by a big sight.'' Jones replied, j h, 'listing into Ins pooet an envelope! nearly coveied with pencil marks; j but I'll ki'l Dummy next time 1 sea htm!'' An Ain'ulioiis Hoy. JllV H.iy-l'. pa, may I study elo cution? Frond Fnpa liub'od you may, my hov, if you wi-h. You desire to be come a groat orator, don't you?' "Yes, that's it." "Some day, perhaps, have your Video ringing through the balls of ,( 'ongrcss?" "1 shouldn't rate for lliat. I want to bo an after-dinner speaker." "Ah, you me ambitious for soi'ia' di'tinction, then?" "No, I wivit Hie dinner-"," liuml New s, The Honsfi of Never. The house of Never is built, tbfjr st. Just otst the hills of th By-and-By, Its gates are reached by a devious way. Hidden from all but an angel's eye. It winds about nml in ud out The lii I Is and dales to sever. Uuce over the hi. Is of tlieHr-and-liy And your re lost in the house ul -Never. Tbe house of Never is fitted with waits, With just-lii-a-miiiutes nnd pretty soons. The noise of their wings as they bent tho gates Conn s back to earth in the afternoons Wben shadows fly across the sky And rushes, rude endeavor, To ijiiesti.n the hills of the Hy-ftmt-Hi-As they n.-k for the house of Never. The house of Never was built with tours, And lost in the hills of the Hy-aiid-By Are a million hopes nml a million fears. A buliy's sin iie and a woman's cry. I hc winding way seems bright to- diV, Then darkness fall foreer, J'or over the hills of the By-nnd-By borrow waits in the house of Never. Chicago Dl-pat Cb. IIIMOKOLS. As a uilc The yard-stick. A poor barber is not able to shave a note. S.ife and sound A light conducted over the telephone- Some cf the strongest attachments in life aic madu by officers of 'lie law. A fly bus K.,000 eyes, but it never is able lo sec its way to got around tho butter. The telephone-girl has an extensive railing acquaintance in the most ex clusive circles. The saying "A thing of beauty is a joy forever," docs not apply loa band tome woman with a hot leuiper. "Theie is a groat deal of wear nnd tear in this biisiues-,"' said I lie dry goods salesman as ho ripped off a few yards ol calico. The coiitra.llctioiiS in onr slang Should nnike us somewhat humble j When we "get on" to anything "lis thin they any wc "tumule." Toiinii) l'aw, I have found out whero the litllu birds jro to when they leave. Mr. Figg Well, where? Tommy To Wing land. "1 don't see why you call bim greedy when he gave you bis nice huge apple 10 divide." "Thai's just il. Of course I had to givo him tbo biggest picco then.'" Servant Flense, niu'ain, (hero's ft poor man at tho door with wooden legs. Y'oiiug II oii-cwifo Why, Ua betie, what can we do with wooden leg? Tell him we don't any. "You find the typewriter useful in your business?'' "1 should say so. When a bore comes in I give the op erator the tip, and the machine makes so iiiue'i noise he oati'l hear himself think.' "Hello!" said tho earth when a South American disturhaiij was brought to bis attention. "I will have to got up more than one revolution a day if 1 am lo keep up wl b the. times!" A Horse With an Artificial live. A line-looking brown trebling owned by lr. Waller W. White bad one of bis eyes injured about Iwo yearn ago. and gradually lost ibo sight in Hint optic. The case was brought to (he attention of Dr. Ward, Ihe S nte Vet erinarian, some weeks ago. It. is a d.ftieult matter lo secure artificial eyes for horses that wili not warp, bleak, or fall out. Dr. Waid,know that the proper article could be produced in England, and in reply to a letter the delicate piece of compound was re. reived a few days ago. It is made of a composition of vulcanite, and will not change color or become easily In jured. Several days ago dried tip the inj.iie I eye, and placed a sninll circular piece ef vulcanite in too socket so ns lo accustom Ihe horse lo the new sensti. lion. The imported eye was put in &( 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon. Dr. Ward put a few drops of oil on tbo disklike arrangement, ami, with the aid of a lancet, laised the eyelids nnd placed the eye in position. The arti licial adornment looks exceedingly natural. Baltimore American. A Joke on (he l'cdagojuo. Doctor F. C. Wines, founder of Ilia National Frison Association, bad formerly boon princi,,al of a bcys' school. Oue day bo bad occasion lo "tionncu" 11 boy, and il is supposed did the work thoroughly. Tbo Ind took his revenge in a way that tho doctor himself could not help laugh ing at. D tc'at Wines' front door boro a plate 011 which was the one w id "Wines." Tho boy wrote an addition in big letters, so that the ln sciption I'm: Wines nnd Other L rkcrs. -Argonaut.